Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Cation-Driven Increases of CO<sub>2</sub> Utilization in a Bipolar Membrane Electrode Assembly for CO<sub>2</sub> Electrolysis

151

Citations

37

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Advancing reaction rates for electrochemical CO<sub>2</sub> reduction in membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) have boosted the promise of the technology while exposing new shortcomings. Among these is the maximum utilization of CO<sub>2</sub>, which is capped at 50% (CO as targeted product) due to unwanted homogeneous reactions. Using bipolar membranes in an MEA (BPMEA) has the capability of preventing parasitic CO<sub>2</sub> losses, but their promise is dampened by poor CO<sub>2</sub> activity and selectivity. In this work, we enable a 3-fold increase in the CO<sub>2</sub> reduction selectivity of a BPMEA system by promoting alkali cation (K<sup>+</sup>) concentrations on the catalyst's surface, achieving a CO Faradaic efficiency of 68%. When compared to an anion exchange membrane, the cation-infused bipolar membrane (BPM) system shows a 5-fold reduction in CO<sub>2</sub> loss at similar current densities, while breaking the 50% CO<sub>2</sub> utilization mark. The work provides a combined cation and BPM strategy for overcoming CO<sub>2</sub> utilization issues in CO<sub>2</sub> electrolyzers.

References

YearCitations

Page 1